Inherited IL-17RC deficiency in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis

Y Ling, S Cypowyj, C Aytekin, M Galicchio… - Journal of Experimental …, 2015 - rupress.org
Y Ling, S Cypowyj, C Aytekin, M Galicchio, Y Camcioglu, S Nepesov, A Ikinciogullari…
Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2015rupress.org
Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) is characterized by recurrent or persistent
infections of the skin, nail, oral, and genital mucosae with Candida species, mainly C.
albicans. Autosomal-recessive (AR) IL-17RA and ACT1 deficiencies and autosomal-
dominant IL-17F deficiency, each reported in a single kindred, underlie CMC in otherwise
healthy patients. We report three patients from unrelated kindreds, aged 8, 12, and 37 yr with
isolated CMC, who display AR IL-17RC deficiency. The patients are homozygous for …
Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis (CMC) is characterized by recurrent or persistent infections of the skin, nail, oral, and genital mucosae with Candida species, mainly C. albicans. Autosomal-recessive (AR) IL-17RA and ACT1 deficiencies and autosomal-dominant IL-17F deficiency, each reported in a single kindred, underlie CMC in otherwise healthy patients. We report three patients from unrelated kindreds, aged 8, 12, and 37 yr with isolated CMC, who display AR IL-17RC deficiency. The patients are homozygous for different nonsense alleles that prevent the expression of IL-17RC on the cell surface. The defect is complete, abolishing cellular responses to IL-17A and IL-17F homo- and heterodimers. However, in contrast to what is observed for the IL-17RA– and ACT1-deficient patients tested, the response to IL-17E (IL-25) is maintained in these IL-17RC–deficient patients. These experiments of nature indicate that human IL-17RC is essential for mucocutaneous immunity to C. albicans but is otherwise largely redundant.
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